V. Drug and Alcohol Testing
Drug and alcohol testing, with some limitations in a handful of states, is legal. Futhermore, when combined with the other components of a comprehensive program, testing can be a highly successful deterrent to employee substance abuse and an effective tool in helping employers identify workers in need of assistance.
Though setting up a testing program is not a simple process, every year more and more employers join the ranks of those companies that conduct drug and alcohol testing. According to the American Management Association, 87.2 percent of the respondents to their annual survey of the 1,000 largest companies in the United States include drug testing in their workplace substance abuse programs.
Ian Ellison, Vice President of Tucson Rubber, a manufacturer of rubber mechanical parts in Arizona, says a high degree of absenteeism, a general lack of attention, and low productivity at the plant led the company to discover that about 20 percent of its work force was involved with drug use. In response, the company implemented a pre-employment drug testing policy. At first, says Ellison, the results were "unbelievable."
"Almost every third person who walked through the door couldn't pass a drug test," Ellison says. Soon the word spread regarding Tucson Rubber's policy. A sign on the door warns of the company's drug testing program. "Some of them just see that sign and turn around," Ellison adds. Today, the company estimates that only 5 percent of its employees are involved with drugs.
Before you implement a drug and/or alcohol testing program, consider the following.
- Who will you test? (Job applicants? All employees? Only those in safety-sensitive positions?)
- When will you test? (After accidents? When you have reason to believe that an employee is involved in substance abuse? As part of periodic physical examinations? Randomly?)
- For what will you test? (Marijuana, opiates, amphetamines, cocaine, and PCP as the federal government requires of some employers? Alcohol? Legally prescribed drugs that are commonly abused?)
- What consequences will employees and job applicants face if they test positive?
- Who will conduct your drug testing?
Again, it is wise to include your employees in all facets of your program's development, including drug testing. It is also important to remember that drug testing is a mandatory subject of collective bargaining.
Conclusion
For many employers, workplace substance abuse programs work. They save the company money and, in some cases, they end up saving careers, families and lives. And for one employer, it just wouldn't be worth being in business without his program.
Four years after implementing his workplace substance abuse program, Jerry Moland, owner of Turfscape Landscape Care, Inc., of Chandler, Arizona, says his company has realized savings of more than $50,000 per yearÑan enormous savings on only $550,000 in annual sales. Moland says "If I couldn't have my drug-free workplace program, I'd just lock up my doors and go out of business."